Election and Hate Crimes

November 1, 2018

Hello everybody out
there in farm country. This radio
commentary is brought to you by the National Corn Growers Association, CropLife
America, and Renewable Fuels Association.
They are all friends, supporters, and allies of healthy farm economy and
prosperous rural America. Thank you.

And now for today’s commentary -

There has been a lot going on in the last week. I will focus on some of those topics.

One of the saddest happenings would be the deadly attack on the Tree of
Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh by a lone anti-Semitic gunman. Eleven were killed just because they were
Jewish. It is nothing new. Jewish people have been persecuted going back
to ancient Rome. But it shouldn’t happen
here in the U.S. today.

On top of the above, we had the angry idiot that mailed out bombs to
Democrat leaders that he hated. However,
just because he loves President Trump, you can’t blame the President for such a
disgraceful act. With the mid-term
election coming up next week, Democrats want to blame everything bad on
Trump. Even though the President has
Jewish members in his immediate family, and in support of Israel, he moved the
U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem. None of his predecessors had the guts to do that.

Something to be happy about – President Trump was a speaker at the
annual Future Farmers of America Convention in Indianapolis, Indiana. No U.S. President has spoken at their
convention since President H. W. Bush. I
was honored to speak to them last year.

Two years ago, we elected Donald Trump as our President. He is different. He has been responsible for some major
actions that have made some of us happy and others angry. I’m talking about deregulation, opening up
oil drilling, oil pipelines, tax cuts, demanded our allies pay their fair share
for defense, met with Kim Jong Un of North Korea – on and on.

Consumer confidence just hit an 18-year high. The question now is whether the Trump economy
and Trump Presidential actions can help carry Republicans across the election
finish line. The President’s party
almost always loses a large number of seats in the mid-terms. Just look back to Obama (2010 and 2014),
Reagan (1952), Clinton (1994), and Bush (2006) – all big losses.

Democrats need a net gain of 23 seats to take control of the
House. In the Senate, with Republicans
holding a slim 51 to 49 lead, Democrats would only need to add 2 seats to take control. Here is what I predict: Republicans will actually gain seats in the
Senate. They will lose seats in the
House, but will hold on to a very slim majority.

I’ll be at the National Association of Farm Broadcasters this week and
then to the farm.